Abstract
Wildfires burn large parts of the tropics every year, shaping ecosystem structure and functioning. Yet the complex interplay between climate, vegetation and human factors that drives fire dynamics is still poorly understood. Here we show that on all continents, except Australia, tropical fire regimes change drastically as mean annual precipitation falls below 550 mm. While the frequency of fires decreases below this threshold, the size and intensity of wildfires rise sharply. This transition to a regime of Rare-Intense-Big fires (RIB-fires) corresponds to the relative disappearance of trees from the landscape. Most dry regions on the globe are projected to become substantially drier under global warming. Our findings suggest a global zone where this drying may have important implications for fire risks to society and ecosystem functioning.
Introduction
Forests, savannas and treeless vegetation represent alternative states over a precipitation gradient in the tropics1,2. A bistability of tropical forest versus savanna is thought to be mostly maintained by fire and herbivores driving vegetation towards an open savanna condition despite high rainfall levels3–5. However, it is unclear how vegetation, climate and fire interact at the lower end of the precipitation gradient, between treeless conditions and savannas. It has been suggested that precipitation determines tree cover for areas with mean annual precipitation <650–1000 mm3,6, resulting in a gradual increase in (maximum) tree cover over a precipitation gradient. Instead, remotely sensed data of global tree cover indicate that there is a distinct ‘treeless state’ with little or no trees, of which the likelihood becomes higher at low precipitation1. While fire frequency is widely considered the main factor in maintaining savanna vegetation in moist regions3–5, in the case of dry areas it is often assumed that fires do not drive tree dynamics because of their infrequent occurrence7,8. However, ample evidence indicates that in these dry areas large scaled tree establishment occurs after wet years and that fire strongly limits sapling recruitment9,10 and relative high tree cover do occur at a local scale6, indicating that climate alone does not seem to be able to explain the overall very low tree cover below ~550 mm precipitation. Here we explore whether this marked shift between treeless and savanna might be related to a change in fire regime over the global tropics (17° N − 35° S).
Results and Discussion
Although wildland fires are generally characterised by burned area extent, many more factors describe a fire regime (e.g. intensity, size, return interval) and determine the resulting impact of fire on the environment11,12. The spatial characteristics of fire occurrence and fire-vegetation feedbacks are often explained by Self-Organized Criticality (SOC) theory13. In these SOC “forest fire” models, the interplay between regrowth of vegetation and the action of fire makes the system evolve to a scale invariant regime, where the size distribution of fires follows a power law14,15:
1 |
where is the frequency density of fires with size A F, and α and −β are empirical parameters. We use the Slope of the Fire Size Distribution (SFSD), indicated by −β, to characterise the spatial properties of wildfires. The value of SFSD thus describes the relative frequencies of fires of different sizes. A SFSD of zero indicates that all sizes of fire are equally frequent, whereas lower values of SFSD indicate that smaller fires are more frequent than larger fires. The power law is fitted to individual fire sizes computed from the MODIS burned area product MCD4516 (see Supplementary Methods and Fig. S1).
The SFSD shows a clear global pattern (Fig. 1). The tropical savannas, north and south of the central African rainforest and large parts of South America, show low values of SFSD, indicating that these regions are dominated by frequent small fires. By contrast, high values of the SFSD in southern Africa, the Sahel and Australia, indicate that these drier regions are characterised by a higher frequency of larger fires.
A closer look at the relationship between SFSD and rainfall reveals that the SFSD remains relatively constant until precipitation falls below ~550 mm where the SFSD rises to a markedly higher level (Figs 2a, S2). The same pattern can be observed when plotting SFSD over GPP (Gross Primary Production; see Fig. S3) with precipitation closely related the vegetation productivity over the tropics17. This shift in fire size distribution is clear and consistent for Africa, with South America following the same trend. The pattern is different for Australia, with large fires commonly found even at high precipitation levels (see also Supplementary Figs S4 and S5).
The precipitation level where the fire size distribution changes (~550 mm) corresponds roughly to the conditions where Hirota et al.1 (Fig. 1c therein) report the drier limit to the savanna (see also Sankaran et al.6). Scholes et al.18 also reported pronounced vegetation transitions for southern Africa around this precipitation threshold, with possible analogues in northern Africa, Australia and America. We analysed a new satellite LiDAR based estimate of tree cover19 around this climatic threshold (Supplementary methods). The LiDAR data confirm a drop in tree cover (Figs 2b, S2) and canopy height (Fig. S6) around 550 mm precipitation, indicating that this might be a critical precipitation threshold at which not only the fire regime, but also the vegetation changes sharply.
The difference in fire behaviour between the dry and wet tropics is not restricted to SFSD. In the drier tropics we also observe larger absolute mean and maximum fire sizes (95 percentile), and higher fire intensity in terms of Fire Radiative Power (FRP), whereas the number of fires and fire frequency (total burned area) are lower than in the wet tropics (Table 1, see Fig. S7 for figures with burned fraction and Fig. S8 for FRP). It should be noted that these values are relative to the tropical region since fire regimes with intenser fires are well known to occur in other biomes such as boreal forests. The distinctly different fire regime below 550 mm mean annual precipitation and the concomitant loss of trees around this threshold raise the question of how this intriguing change around a climatic threshold might be explained.
Table 1.
SFSD | Mean fire size (ha) | Percentile95 fire size (ha) | Mean FRP (MW) | Number of fires (100 km-2) | Burned fraction (%) | Length of fire season (month) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dry ( < 550 mm) | −1.501 | 929.668 | 3002.216 | 47.978 | 2.643 | 3.310 | 6.210 |
Wet ( > 550 mm) | −1.902 | 532.197 | 1466.396 | 31.424 | 17.478 | 8.839 | 7.149 |
t-value | 31.391** | 6.763** | 11.498** | 14.143** | −33.550** | −14.414** | −8.130** |
**p < 1e-10.
The high frequency of fires in savannas may result from a combination of factors. Fire occurrence is highest at intermediate precipitation and thus vegetation productivity levels (the intermediate fire-productivity hypothesis20). In dry regions fires are limited by fuel availability while fires are largely absent from high precipitation regions because the fuel is generally to wet to burn21. At intermediate levels, fuels can build-up during the productive wet period. This fuel build-up is further exacerbated by the limited palatability of the grasses present in these systems18. During dry periods the high frequency of human-ignited fires leads to a peak in fire occurrence. The relative small size of such fires could be related to the heterogeneity of mesic landscapes, where the topographic complexity also increases around 550 mm annual precipitation (Fig. S9). When it comes to the possibility for fires to spread, moister places may act as barriers22 and thus keep savanna fires relatively small. When the climate is dry enough (around 550 mm, which would be a ‘percolation threshold’), these barriers would not prevent fire propagation anymore, allowing full Self Organized Criticality to develop. Fires can spread freely and are limited merely by the spatial pattern of fuel limitation resulting from earlier fires or grazing. In favour of this view is the fact that our observed SFSD for these dry areas are consistent with SOC fire models23, whereas the savanna fire regime we find is biased towards small fires.
The relative rarity of fires in dry places may also result from a combination of factors. Dry areas typically support low human population and lightning is less frequent, implying lower ignition rates24. However, more importantly, fuel accumulation is slower and strongly coupled to rainy pulses. Indeed, larger and intenser fire events over vast areas usually follow peaks in grass production during rainy phases associated with the El Niño Southern Oscillation25. It is possible that for some drylands around the world, a feedback between fire regime and shrub cover could also play a role in explaining the observed patterns. Below a certain fire frequency shrubs may invade grasslands26–28. Shrubs burn less readily than dry grass and further reduce fire occurrence. This may imply that once a fire occurs the accumulated fuel allows fire to burn more intensely and over large extents. Whereas savanna trees are well adapted to survive small and less intense fires29, more intense fires kill more trees and inhibit tree recruitment12, potentially explaining the conspicuously treeless state and amplifying the effect of decreasing precipitation. Overgrazing under dry conditions might strengthen this shift by facilitating shrub encroachment and shifts from perennial to annual grasses27,30. Furthermore, litter flammability properties tend to reinforce large scaled patterns in fire frequency and intensity31.
Many uncertainties remain when it comes to the complex interactions between vegetation, climate, fire, herbivores and humans3,5,27–32. Our observations may help to shape a search image for what happens at this transition to a treeless state. One observation that might guide further research is the fact that we observed a different pattern in Australia, where high SFSD values are found over the entire precipitation gradient. These more widespread large fires, even under high precipitation, seem to indicate different spatial fire behaviour, probably related to the previously noted low tree cover in Australia1,2. In addition, Australia differs from other continents by its limited orography, resulting in continuous and non-dissected landscapes even under mesic conditions, even further accentuated by the very low population density. This allows fire to spread over large areas contrary to mesic areas of other continents. This would be consistent with the hypothesis that the high SFSD found over savannas is due to the presence of widespread natural fire breaks, while SOC develops in areas where this is not the case.
The change to a RIB fire regime below 550 mm annual precipitation may have important consequences under future global change. Although the future projections of precipitation are still uncertain, there is a general trend of dry areas becoming drier under future climate change33. This implies that the 550 mm precipitation boundary might move into the classical savanna areas (Fig. S10), implying that fire regimes could change from low to high intensity for large areas such as southern Africa and the Gran Chaco region in South America, with concordantly a decrease in fire frequency. The impact will likely differ locally depending on spatial heterogeneity and differences in human land use practises34 with humans currently decreasing burnt area globally with unknown impacts on ecosystem dynamics35. Furthermore, other large scaled environmental changes might cause a disruption from the present fire regime. The high atmospheric CO2 levels cause an increase in vegetation productivity (CO2 fertilization) and tree cover with a variable response on fire occurrence21,36. These effects will also differ between continents. For instance, in Australia where RIB fires already dominate over the entire precipitation gradient, little change may be expected except for a reduction in fire frequency due to lower productivity21. By contrast, South America has much lower fire frequency than the other continents (Fig. S7). The factors that cause such differences are unknown32, but land use and other human environmental impacts may well play an important role. Although fire characteristics depend in part on human impacts11, the shift we find in most of the global tropics around 550 mm precipitation suggests that climate-induced change in fire characteristics can be profound. This may drive shifts from savannas to a treeless state, with resulting impacts on carbon stocks, biodiversity and ecological services. At the same time the change into a RIB fire dominated state would imply an altered fire risk to society in some regions.
Methods
The fire regime is described by the frequency, intensity and size of fires. Fire frequency is indicated by the % of the gridcell burned as detected by satellite derived burned-area from the GFED437. As a proxy for fire intensity we use satellite derived fire radiative power from the MODIS thermal anomaly product38. The fire size was estimated by the Slope of the Fire Size Distribution (SFSD) based on the global MODIS MCD45 burned area data16 adapted to estimate individual fire sizes39,40 (see Supplementary Information). Next to the SFSD, we also extracted the mean fire size, 95 percentile fire size from the same dataset as additional information on fire size behaviour. Further fire regime indicators used are the annual fire number for each grid cell40. The length of the fire season (number of months with >10% of annual burned area) was extracted from the MODIS thermal anomaly product38. These datasets were aggregated at 1° × 1° spatial resolution for analysis.
When plotting the SFSD over precipitation, a clear shift at 550 mm mean annual precipitation41 was detected for the total dataset and for each continent separately. We detected the precipitation threshold of these transitions using a simple and robust method using the difference in mean SFSD (or tree cover) above and below a given precipitation level (with equal sample size both above and below the precipitation value selected; 200 and 1000 samples each side, for SFSD and tree cover respectively). If a transition exists this should show up as a peak difference in mean SFSD (or tree cover) over the precipitation gradient, with the peak being the precipitation value at which the shift occurs (Fig. S2). The range of high values/transition overlaps strongly, with the peak around 550 mm which is used as the threshold value.
We tested whether the SFSD and a set of other indicators of fire characteristics (mean fire size, 95 percentile fire size, fire radiative power, number of fires and burned fraction) extracted from existing global fire products showed a shift at this threshold using the Welch student t-test. This threshold at 550 mm precipitation seems to coincide with a shift from treeless vegetation to savanna. This was analysed using the satellite based LiDAR vegetation height measurements19. See supplementary methods for more information.
Data availability
All the datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
Electronic supplementary material
Acknowledgements
S. Hantson acknowledges support by the EU FP7 projects BACCHUS (grant agreement no. 603445) and LUC4C (grant ag. no. 603542). This work was supported by a Spinoza Award 2009 and an ERC advanced grant 268732 to M.S. C.X. is supported by NSFC (41271197). This work was supported, in part, by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF), through the Helmholtz Association and its research programme ATMO. S.P. is grateful to Institut Català de Ciències del Clima (IC3) and Centre de Recerca Matemàtica (CRM) for their support.
Author Contributions
S.H. generated the datasets and performed the analysis. C.X. analysed the LiDAR data. S.H. and M.S. wrote the manuscript. S.H., M.S., S.P., C.X., G.L., E.H.v.N., M.H. and J.M. interpreted the results and revised the text.
Competing Interests
The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Footnotes
Electronic supplementary material
Supplementary information accompanies this paper at 10.1038/s41598-017-14654-9.
Publisher's note: Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
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Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Supplementary Materials
Data Availability Statement
All the datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.